Leixlip, Ireland/ NY/ Santa Clara Calif. — Intel Corporation and Apollo announced a definitive agreement under which Apollo-managed funds and affiliates will make an $11 billion investment to acquire from Intel a 49% interest in a joint venture related to Intel’s Fab 34.
The transaction is Intel’s second agreement under the Semiconductor Co-Investment Program (SCIP). SCIP is an element of Intel’s smart capital strategy, a financing approach designed to create financial flexibility to accelerate the company’s strategy, including investments in its global manufacturing operations, while maintaining a strong balance sheet.
Fab 34 is located in Leixlip, Ireland, and is Intel’s state-of-the-art high volume manufacturing (HVM) facility for wafers manufactured using Intel 4 and Intel 3 process technologies. To date, Intel has invested 18.4 billion dollars in Fab 34. This transaction will allow Intel to free up some of these investments and redeploy them to other business areas while continuing the expansion of Fab 34. As part of its restructuring strategy, Intel has invested billions of dollars to regain process leadership and build global capacity for the manufacture of leading-edge wafers and advanced packaging.
Under the terms of the agreement, the joint venture will receive the rights to manufacture wafers in Fab 34 to meet the long-term demand for Intel’s products and provide capacity for Intel Foundry’s customers. Intel will hold a 51% majority stake in the Joint Undertaking. Intel will retain full ownership and operational control of Fab 34 and its assets. The transaction is intended to improve the company’s solid balance sheet with capital at a price below Intel’s cost of equity. It is expected that the investment in the joint venture will be treated as equity-like from a ratings perspective.
“The agreement between Intel and Apollo provides us with additional flexibility in executing our strategy to create the most resilient and sustainable semiconductor supply chain in the world. Our investments in state-of-the-art capacity in the U.S. and Europe will be critical to meeting the growing demand for silicon as the global semiconductor market doubles in the next five years,” said David Zinsner, Intel’s CFO. “It also underscores our role as a trusted financing partner leveraging private capital to build the new economy, including next-generation AI technology that will require major investments in sustainable energy generation, data centers, foundries and semiconductor capacity.”
Details of the transaction
Construction of Fab 34 is largely complete, and large-scale production of Intel® Core™ Ultra processors on Intel 4 technology began there in September 2023. The ramp-up of Granite Rapids, Intel’s next-generation data center product based on Intel 3 technology, is also in full swing.
The joint venture will manufacture wafers for sale to Intel on a cost-plus-margin basis. Under the agreement, Intel is obliged to complete the expansion of Fab 34 and to purchase wafers from the joint venture for itself and for external customers, with minimum quantities for wafer requirements being promised once the plant has been completed.
For the purposes of financial reporting, Intel expects to consolidate the results of the joint venture via the net result and to include the result attributable to the 49% interest in the net result of non-controlling interests. Intel assumes that the net profit attributable to non-controlling interests will be limited in the first two years, but will increase thereafter as the factory is fully utilized.
Intel’s manufacturing sites in Ireland
Intel celebrated the opening of Fab 34 in Ireland in September 2023, marking the first use of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography in high-volume manufacturing in Europe. Fab 34 is designed for the high-volume production of Intel 3 and Intel 4 technologies. In addition to Fab 34, Intel has a second manufacturing facility in Leixlip, Fab 24, which is an important site for the production of Intel’s 14-nanometer silicon microprocessors and is also preparing to support Intel foundry customers. The transaction with Apollo relates only to Fab 34.
Consultant
Goldman Sachs & Co. acted as lead financial advisor to Intel, while Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and Eversheds Sutherland acted as legal advisors to Intel.
The law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP is advising the funds and affiliates managed by Apollo, while Latham & Watkins LLP is providing legal advice to Apollo’s co-investors.